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March 30, 2018 17:23
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My Linux Development Environment of 2018: https://dev.to/brpaz/my-linux-development-environment-of-2018-ch7
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My Linux Development Environment of 2018 | |
Bruno Paz | |
In this blog post I will talk a bit about the setup and software of my personal laptop, powered by Linux. This is somewhat inspired by this post, but for a Linux based setup. | |
I wont list all the applications I have installed on the machine, but only the ones I consider relevant and more focused on Development. | |
Base system | |
Right now my machine is running Linux Mint 18.3 but I am thinking of moving back to Ubuntu 18.04 when its out. I dont really have any complains with Mint, but with with the replacement of Unity with Gnome 3 I want to give it a try. | |
Productivity Tools | |
Boostnote — My main note taking application. I use it mostly to store code snippets and reference material for my development activities. Its open source, cross platform and works completely offline. I wish to have an easier way to sync between multiple machines but since the notes are stored as CSON files, I am using a private Git repo to sync. | |
Simplenote — I use Simplenote as my “scratchpad”, for quick notes and thoughts. mostly when on my mobile. | |
Cerebro — Cerebro is an open source cross platform launcher similar to Spotlight and Alfred for Mac. The maintenance is kinda low atm and I felt the need to fork it, but it works pretty well. It doesnt have the same amount of plugins as Alfred does, but I have been developing some. | |
Internet | |
Google Chrome — My primary browser of choice. | |
Firefox — My secondary browser. | |
Min — Min is a minimalist webbrowser. Since Linux doesn't have anything like Fenetre for Mac, I use it when I want to browse documentation, follow a tutorial or watch a video side in a Picture in Picture / side by side mode. | |
Dropbox — For sharing files. | |
Mailspring — Email client. | |
Corebird — Twitter Desktop client | |
Ramme — Instagram desktop client | |
Caprine — Facebook messenger desktop client | |
Whatsapp Desktop — WhatsApp desktop client with built in notifications and system tray integration. | |
Slack — For chat and engage with communities. | |
Wireshark — For network sniffing. Useful when developing to see the communication between multiple applications. | |
Graphics and Multimedia | |
Pinta — Pinta is a free, open source program for drawing and image editing. Its my image editor of choice. While Gimp is the most popular image editor on Linux, I found Pinta to much more simpler to use and resembles more with Photostop. | |
XnConvert — a powerful and free cross-platform batch image processor, allowing you to combine over 80 actions. | |
Draw.io — Draw.io is my app of choice for designing all kinds of diagrams, from flowcharts, to sequence diagrams or even wireframes. Its 100% free to use and can be integrated with Google Drive. | |
Shutter — For taking screenshots and quickly annotate them with arrows, boxes etc. It also have some nice effects like blur sensible parts of an image. | |
ffmulticonverter — For converting images / videos between multiple formats. | |
Peek — Peek allows to record the screen and save as GIF format. very useful for creating demo gifs for put on project readme files for example. | |
pick — Color picker | |
Trimage — Image compression tool | |
Sound and Video | |
VLC — my favorite media player. Version 3 have chromecast support built in which is even better. | |
Kdenlive — for video editing | |
Kazam — To record screencasts | |
Spotify — For listening to my favorite music. | |
System utilities | |
Bleachbit — System cleaner utility. | |
Stacer — Linux System Optimizer and Monitoring | |
Caffeine — To keep my machine awake | |
Pullover — To receive Pushover notifications on my desktop | |
CopyQ — To manage my clipboard | |
Editors | |
Jetbrains (PHPstorm, WebStorm) — My IDE of choice, | |
Visual studio code — All in one text editor | |
vim (for editing files on command line) | |
Terminal setup | |
Tilix — My favorite terminal emulator. | |
Zsh shell — An feature rich alternative to bash | |
zplug — To manage zsh plugins. | |
zsh-completions — Additional completion definitions for Zsh. | |
Command line utilities | |
tldr — tldr is an alternative to man pages but only with the essential. Great way of quickly find any command syntax. | |
yadm — Dotfiles manager | |
fasd — Fasd is a command-line productivity booster. Fasd offers quick access to files and directories for POSIX shells. It is inspired by tools like autojump, z and v. Fasd keeps track of files and directories you have accessed, so that you can quickly reference them in the command line. | |
fzf — A command-line fuzzy finder | |
the silver searcher — A code-searching tool similar to ack, but faster | |
lf — A command line file manager. | |
pandoc — convert between multiple file types from the command line. | |
pwgen — Password generator | |
lnav — An advanced log file viewer for the small-scale | |
trash-cli — trash-cli trashes files recording the original path, deletion date, and permissions. | |
opn-cli — Opens stuff like websites, files, executables. Cross-platform. | |
ascicinema — Record and share your terminal sessions, the right way. | |
hostess — An idempotent command-line utility for managing your /etc/hosts file. | |
get-port-cli — Get an available port | |
public-ip-cli — Get your public IP address | |
internal-ip-cli — Get your internal IP address | |
speedtest-cli — Command line interface for testing internet bandwidth using speedtest.net | |
fkill-cli — Fabulously kill processes. Cross-platform. | |
doctoc — Generates table of contents for markdown files inside local git repository. Links are compatible with anchors generated by github or other sites. | |
Development Environment | |
I use Docker extensively in my development environment. I still have common runtimes like go, php, node (with nvm) and ruby (with rvm) installed in the host. | |
Docker | |
Docker-compose — Define and run multi-container applications with Docker | |
Minikube — Run Kubernetes locally | |
Telepresence — Local development against a remote Kubernetes or OpenShift cluster | |
ctop — Top-like interface for container metrics | |
Vagrant — Development Environments Made Easy. I dont Vagrant that much nowadays unless I want to work on infrastucture stuff. (Ex: testing spinning a new cluster or testing an Ansible playbook). | |
Dnsdock — For managing dns of Docker containers. | |
Development tools | |
how2 — Stack overflow from terminal | |
Pet — Simple command-line snippet manager. I use it to store the commands I use most. | |
caniuse-cmd — Caniuse command line tool | |
hub — hub is a command line tool that wraps git in order to extend it with extra features and commands that make working with GitHub easier. | |
conventional-changelog — Generate a changelog from git metadata | |
release-it — CLI release tool for Git repos and npm packages. | |
git-open — Type git open to open the GitHub page or website for a repository in your browser. | |
git-semver — Git plugin for Semantic Versioning | |
tig — Text-mode interface for git | |
jq — jq is a lightweight and flexible command-line JSON processor | |
python-gitlab — GitLab client | |
overcommit —a tool to manage and configure Git hooks. | |
tmux and tmuxp — Terminal multiplexer. | |
gitbook-cli — GitBook’s command line interface | |
pageres-cli — Capture website screenshots | |
httpie — Modern command line HTTP client — user-friendly curl alternative with intuitive UI, JSON support, syntax highlighting, wget-like downloads, extensions, etc | |
yeoman — Yeoman is a tool that allows to scaffold projects from a series of templates. | |
generator-editorconfig — Generates .editorconfig files. | |
license — Create licenses from the command-line. | |
gi — Create useful .gitignore files for your project | |
travis.rb — Travis CI Client (CLI and Ruby library) | |
http-server — http-server is a simple, zero-configuration command-line http server. It is powerful enough for production usage, but it's simple and hackable enough to be used for testing, local development, and learning. | |
codeclimate-cli — codeclimate is a command line interface for the Code Climate analysis platform. It allows you to run Code Climate engines on your local machine inside of Docker containers. | |
mycli — A Terminal Client for MySQL with AutoCompletion and Syntax Highlighting. | |
json-server — Get a full fake REST API with zero coding in less than 30 seconds. | |
localtunnel — localtunnel exposes your localhost to the world for easy testing and sharing! No need to mess with DNS or deploy just to have others test out your changes. | |
mailhog — Web and API based SMTP testing | |
artilery — Artillery is a modern, powerful & easy-to-use load testing toolkit. Use it to ship scalable applications that stay performant & resilient under high load. | |
Postman — Postman Makes API Development Simple. | |
Devdocs-Desktop — DevDocs.io combines multiple API documentations in a fast, organized, and searchable interface. This is an unoffcial desktop app for it. | |
DevOps tools | |
doctl — A command line tool for DigitalOcean services. | |
gcloud-sdk — The official sdk to interact with Google Cloud infrastucture. | |
aws-cli — This package provides a unified command line interface to Amazon Web Services. | |
ansible — Automate infrasctucture | |
terraform — Write, Plan, and Create Infrastructure as Code | |
kubectl — kubectl is a command line interface for running commands against Kubernetes clusters | |
kubectx — Fast way to switch between clusters and namespaces in kubectl! | |
kubeval — Validate your Kubernetes configuration files, supports multiple Kubernetes versions | |
helm — The Kubernetes Package Manager | |
heroku-cli — The Heroku Command Line Interface (CLI) makes it easy to create and manage your Heroku apps directly from the terminal. It’s an essential part of using Heroku. | |
forge.sh — Define and deploy multi-container apps in Kubernetes, from source | |
Firebase tools — The Firebase Command Line Tools | |
dpl — Dpl (dee-pee-ell) is a deploy tool made for continuous deployment. | |
Conclusion | |
This is current Development machine. Hope you have find this useful. | |
I am always looking for ways to improve my workflow, so if you use any tool that you find useful and its not listed here, feel free to comment this post. | |
Linux can be a very powerful development environment. Its a pity that amazing Mac applications like Alfred or Fenetre doesn't have a viable Linux alternative. Thats what I miss the most. And I never used a Mac but I feel the power of these applications! |
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